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Queen Excluder Question?

Hi All,

I've done a good bit of reading about QE's and I'm curious as to why you should remover them after the nectar flow (before wintering).

On my hives I overwintered I leftr a full Medium of capped honey on for winter stores. It looked great in February. I planned on harvesting since I use no chemicals and the honey hadn't granulated. Well, when I went middle of April the Queen in both hives had decided to lay in the supers. Well over 1/2 of each super on each hive was full of capped brood (mostly drone).

Did I do something wrong? When is the correct time to add excluder's so this doesn't happen again?

If this were to happen again, what to do with frames seeing they are Mediums and my brood boxes are deeps.

And also, if they had a full super plus of honey left, they would not have had room to move up. They ate the honey in the super before she laid there. If you had robbed it, they would have starved. She only moves up when the supplies dwindle enough to make room.

You can put the medium on the bottom and they will move up into the deeps as they emerge from the medium. Then you can put it back on top during the next honey flow and they will fill it with honey again.
If you don't want brood in your honey supers, don't leave them on through the winter. Just make sure there are plenty of stores in the two deeps you use for brood chambers.

I know I'm pretty new at this but every book I have read so far says you must leave honey stores for winter.

I would say that my possible in California but not here in Virginia.

I think my problem was I didn't get the excluder back on the hive early enough.
Can anyone tell me when they replace the excluders on their hives. I was thinking or replacing them when I did my first yearly inspection?

If you choose to use excluders, put them back on when the bees are drawing new white wax and storing extra nectar (from a nectar flow, not when you are feeding).
Don't plan on extracting last year's honey this year; leave it for them to raise new bees to gather more honey this year or give it to another colony in need.

"I am the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd lays down His life for the sheep. " John 10:11

Queen excluders are for comb honey and beekeepers who don't understand beekeeping.

Now Iddee, your "stuck in my old ways, nobody that does it different knows what he is doing" side is showing.

We normally winter on 1 deep over 1 medium, 2 deeps are common in our area. What we do in the spring is put the first super on and let the queen lay in it, then when the next super is ready to go on, we push her back down to the story and a half, put the excluder on, then stack the supers on top. The brood in the box about the excluder will get the bees back through the excluder, a potential problem some have with excluders. We pull the excluder when the last honey supers are removed.

Despite what some might say, many who know bees use excluders, especially those who don't like brood in their honey when they are trying to extract.
Of course, if you are running only a few colonies it is easy to pull individual frames without brood to extract, and easy to consolidate brood but it is a putsy process at best. It is the Qs nature to go up the middle of the stack, but she can be anywhere. Whether you use excluders or not often comes down to being a time management decision.
Sheri

Sheri, the only back paddling I will do is to exclude commercial operations like yourself. Hobbyists should not rob a super until it is capped fully and the next one down is well on the way. The bees cannot afford to give it up if there is not one plus capped super on the hive.

Idee, thank you for making an exception for us.
Your comment made me curious. I am wondering if all hobbyists leave that much honey for winter stores or if many of them strip the honey supers and feed back HFCS as commercial operators do.
Sheri

Without getting into the whole QE or no QE debate, I'm doing something similar to you, Sheri. I winter in story and a halves. About the time I add the first super, the queen is already laying in the top medium. I shake her down into the deep and put a QE between the deep and the medium. The brood in the medium draws the bees thru the excluder and gets them working any supers above. After the brood is hatched, the bees will back fill with honey that they get to keep for the winter.

I'm trying to keep my super combs as white as possible so that I have less trouble with wax moths when I store my supers for the winter.

Keeping brood out of the supers does have the positive side effect of discouraging wax moth, good point. We don't have to treat our supers for wax moth. Of course we get a little help in that department from Ol' Man Winter.
Sheri

No, actual comb honey producers like Lloyd Spear and I have found that
the queen is unlikely top lay in a "section" comb honey super like Ross
Rounds, or the Hogg cassettes. In a simple "cut comb" configuration,
the queen may be more likely to lay in the cut-comb super.

> and beekeepers who don't understand beekeeping.

That's just as wrong as the first statement. All those who want to
claim that queen excluders are "honey excluders" suffer from a simple
problem - they have weak and sickly colonies. They don't feed their
bees to get brood rearing started well before the spring blooms, they
don't test for diseases and pests, so they don't know if the have
a problem, and even if they did test, they would refuse to use treatments
on the grounds that they feel that using any sort of medication would
be somehow "bad for the bees". Lord only knows how these people care
for their pets and children!

> Hobbyists should not rob a super until it is capped fully and the next
> one down is well on the way. The bees cannot afford to give it up
> if there is not one plus capped super on the hive.

Hobbyists can do what we big boys do, which is to use a refractometer
to check honey BEFORE the super is capped or completely capped.
Why wait for the bees to completely cap any super?
"Harvest Early, Harvest Often" is the way to get more production from
your hives, as the bees react to empty drawn comb by working harder
to fill it.

If "one plus" super is some sort of suggestion of how much the bees need
to live on over winter, it is very misleading, as different areas need different
amounts of stores for average winters, and of course, winters vary.